Meet Our Students & Graduates
Fall 2022 Recent and Forthcoming Graduates
Cohort 2022 | Cohort 2021 | Cohort 2020 | Cohort 2019 | Cohort 2018 | Cohort 2017 | Cohort 2016 | Cohort 2015 | Cohort 2014 | Cohort 2013 | Cohort 2012
Cohort 2023
Cohort 2022
Alexandra Hood |
Alexandra’s research is centered on addressing systemic racial injustices to advance equity, resilience, and emotional well-being for Black girls and Biracial girls. To frame her inquiry, she uses Black Feminist Thought, Critical Race Feminism, and Intersectionality to examine the influence of adultification on Black and Biracial girls’ identity development. Given Alexandra’s dissertation proposals specific focus on Black and Biracial girls with multi-system involvement, including the Child Welfare System, Juvenile Carceral System, Educational System, and Mental Health System, she has formed a collaborative partnership with a Travis County District Family and Dual Status Court and Judge to deepen the comprehensive understanding of multi-system involvement, and center Black and Biracial girls’ experiences. Alexandra is an adjunct faculty member and proud graduate of MSU Denver’s MSW program. |
Umaira Khan |
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Sheroo Mukhtiar |
Sheroo earned her MSW from Washington University in St. Louisa nd a BSW from Nirmala Niketan in Bombay. She has completed several leadership programs including Leadership Houston and the American Leadership Forum. Sheroo has over 28 years of experience in non-profit leadership and has gained a wealth of knowledge, skills, and experience in managing and operating nonprofits, including program implementation, strategic planning, fundraising, and board development. She has operated as Executive Director for 5 different organizations before her current role as CEO for SERJobs. As a result of these experiences, Sheroo is interested in exploring nonprofit leadership, organizational dynamics, and related issues. She is passionate about developing resources that will enable leaders from within the nonprofit sector to lead and grow impactful organizations. |
Virginia Richard |
Virginia is a proud graduate of Xavier University of Louisiana and the University of Southern California. She also received a Masters in Theology and Ministry from Fuller Theological Seminary. She has worked as a math teacher and interventionist which fuels her interest in school-based research. Her research interests include racial/ethic identity development and cultural awareness and competency, specifically within the school context. |
Andrew Robinson |
Andrew was born and raised in Houston, Texas, and is a licensed master’s social worker in Texas, having graduated from the GCSW in May 2020. Since graduating, Mr. Robinson has worked as an adolescent outpatient therapist, providing individual, family, and group psychotherapy for teens diagnosed with a mental illness or substance use disorder. Mr. Robinson is trained in adherent Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) and is a volunteer for the National Education Alliance for Borderline Personality Disorder (NEA-BPD). Andrew’s research interests focus on mental health in the aging LGBTQ+ community and exploring the ethical use of data science & open-source technologies to improve treatment outcomes among underserved and highly stigmatized populations. In his free time, Andrew loves watching horror movies with his dog, Mouse, fiddling around on his electric violin, shooting film photography, and having weekend dinners with his family. |
Chelsea Sanchez |
Chelsea Sanchez, LCSW is a native Houstonian and proud alumna of the Garland School of Social Work, where she earned her BSW and MSW. Throughout her practice experience, Chelsea has provided case management and mental health services to refugees, survivors of human trafficking, and children and families impacted by the child welfare system. She has presented for conferences and coalitions on building effective coalition partnerships, facilitated professional development regarding trauma-informed care, coordinated advocacy response teams for law enforcement operations, and taught as adjunct faculty at Baylor University. Her research interests include trauma, human trafficking, health and mental health equity, and global social work. |
Cohort 2021
Cohort 2020
Cohort 2019
Gabrielle Aquino-Adriatico, MSW is a fellow for Council of Social Work Education’s Minority Fellowship Program. Her research interests focus on multi-level factors that shape the mental health and well-being of Filipina/o/x communities. Past research projects include: domestic and international research on human trafficking, gender-based violence, minoritized populations, and multi-level factors that impact communities living with HIV/AIDS. Her research agenda is inspired by her family, her community, and her direct practice experiences in Los Angeles, Thailand, and the Philippines. Gabbie is interested in teaching statistics and data analysis, research methods, and community engaged social work practice. Gabbie can be contacted at gaquino@uh.edu. |
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Arlene Bjugstad |
Arlene is a career-long social worker, with more than ten years of direct social work practice, a BSW, MSW and several social work certificates. Her research agenda is uniquely informed by experiences that she has encountered with clients, agencies, and communities through her work. Arlene’s research interests pertain to programs and interventions dedicated to improving the lives of Latinx youth. Specifically, she is interested in school engagement and mechanisms by which schools can create environments that promote positive outcomes for first and second-generation Latinx students. Arlene is interested in teaching Practice Skills, Research Methods, and Policy. |
Alberto Cabrera
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Alberto Cabrera, LCSW-S, is a PhD Candidate at the University of Houston, Graduate College of Social Work, where he also works as a research affiliate with the MH-RITES Research Center. Cabrera is experienced as a therapist, board approved supervisor, field instructor, and director in mental health settings and has taught graduate students in clinical practice and practicum courses as an adjunct professor. His research within the Latinx community focuses on advocacy, improving access to mental health services, and empirically supported treatment of obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Drawing from his professional and clinical experiences, Cabrera’s program of research aims to assist people living with OCD and related mental health conditions. He received his bachelor’s degree in psychology from the University of Houston and master’s degree in social work from Baylor University. He can be contacted at acabrer3@central.uh.edu |
Priscilla's research interests include participatory research, community social work practice, social policy analysis, and advocacy. A native of Lafayette, Louisiana, she received her MSW from the UH GCSW in 2015 and has four years of agency experience in community outreach to historically excluded people, groups, and businesses; interdisciplinary coalition building to leverage resources; and program development of health improvement interventions. Priscilla is interested in conducting qualitative research related to neighborhood effects on determinants of health and in teaching social policy and community practice. |
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Gaby Mohr |
Gaby is originally from Tucson, Arizona and is a proud University of Arizona alum where she earned her bachelors in communication. After UofA she spent some time working with an agency (Amistades, Inc) that transformed the trajectory of her life and she eventually went on to Denver, Colorado to pursue a Masters degree in Social Work at the University of Denver (DU). She then spent time working in the substance use prevention field and wants to focus her research around substance use and the Latinx community as well as marijuana policy research. |
Cohort 2018
Cohort 2017
John Bickel |
John has been a social work practitioner since graduating with an MSW from Indiana University in 1998, and his work experience has informed his interests in youth mental health. In particular, he has focused on social relationships and interconnectedness and the role that metallization plays in developing curiosity, understanding and predictability in one’s mind and in social interactions with others. Implications of this research relate to developing strategies that focus on “hard to reach” youth in child welfare and mental health settings. |
Chinyere Eigege |
Chinyere's research focuses on examining, advocating for, and informing best practices around perinatal mental healthcare of Black women. Specifically, her research seeks to explore factors that influence coping and resiliency among Black women who experience perinatal loss. Her scholarly agenda is informed by several years of behavioral health practice as a licensed clinical social worker, and her community engagement efforts related to improving perinatal health outcomes in the Houston area. Chinyere is interested in teaching qualitative research methods, practice skills lab, social science theories, and health disparities. |
Sandra Jeter |
Sandra conducts research focused on examining, advocating, and intervening to promote educational equality for Black girls and women. Specifically, her research seeks to investigate bias at the intersection of race and gender within education (system and structure), and its influence on Black adolescent girls and their educational experience, as well as examining protective factors to mitigate the negative effects. Through her dissertation, she will explore how school racial socialization impacts developmental competencies among Black adolescent girls, and factors that may protect against negative school racial socialization. Sandra's scholarly agenda is informed by her work as an Adaptive Behavioral Specialist and Community Psychiatrict Treatment Worker with the St. Vincent Family Center's Therapeutic School Age Program. She is interested in teaching Human Behavior in the Social Environment, Confronting Oppression, and Research Methods. |
Sujeeta Menon |
Sujeeta Elizabeth Menon, L.M.S.W, R.S.W (Singapore) is a third year Doctoral Candidate at the Graduate College of Social Work, University of Houston. Sujeeta's research focuses on justice involved youth, particularly in justice involved females with their offending, rehabilitation and desistance process. Sujeeta is interested in developing and implementing evidence based intervention for the juvenile justice system to enhance the desistance process among justice involved females, increase positive social, emotional and health related outcomes and reduce overall recidivism. She has disseminated her research across a number of forums nationally and Internationally such as the Joint World Conference on Social Work, Education and Social Development (SWSD) 2018, Council on Social Work Education and Society for Social Work Research. Sujeeta's scholarly agenda is informed by her prior work as a Social Worker in Singapore for 10 years with Methodist Welfare Services between 2006-2016, where her passion for youth work was fueled and the exposure to the challenges of youth rehabilitation became apparent. She is currently a Teaching Fellow for the online MSW program at the UHGCSW. |
Yu-Ju "Julia" Huang |
Yu-Ju (Julia)'s research interests are coping strategy development, individual and family stress management, psychosocial well-being, and complementary and alternative treatments to regulate mental health issues (especially depression and anxiety) among cancer survivors. Her current research focuses on examining the impacts of psychological and social factors on health and mental health conditions among Asian populations; another interest focuses on the impacts of personal past traumatic experiences on clinical social work professional development in MSW students. Her scholarly agenda is informed by clinical experiences in hospitals and healthcare agencies both in Taiwan and the United States working with cancer patients and their families. These clinical experiences have led to her dissertation. For Yu-Ju’s dissertation, she will identify the relationship between coping mechanisms and the effectiveness of acupuncture in reducing levels of depression among cancer survivors. Yu-Ju is interested in teaching statistics and data analysis, social work research methods, oncology social work, and social work ethics. |
Nikki Vogel, LMSW |
Nikki Vogel is a licensed master social worker in the state of Texas and currently a doctoral student at the University of Houston, Graduate College of Social Work. She received her Bachelor’s degree in Social Work (BSW) from the University of Houston-Clear Lake in 2014 and her Master’s degree in Science in Social Work (MSSW) from the University of Texas at Austin in 2015.
My research experience and research interests are primarily focused in:
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Cohort 2016
Cohort 2015
Cohort 2014
Cohort 2013
Cohort 2012
Christine R. Block, PhD, LCSW |
Dr. Block is a research scientist with the University of Texas School of Biomedical Informatics, Houston Emergency Opioid Engagement System (UT HEROES). She graduated from UHGCSW with her MSW in 2012 and her PhD in 2018. Dr. Block received a postdoctoral fellowship from the Stanley Family Distinguished Chair of Population Health and Community Medicine where she conducted research on medical legal partnerships and community outreach. Her research interests are population health, interprofessional collaboration in healthcare research, education, and practice, mental health and substance abuse disorders. Dr. Block is also trained as a clinical therapist and in an active adjunct professor. |
Kit Ying "Anny" Ma |
Dr. Ma earned her MSW (2005) and Ph.D. in Social Work (2017) from University of Houston. Her doctoral research studies focused on the roles of PTSD and traumatic stressor exposure on reintegration needs of OEF/OIF Veterans, unique needs of Women Veterans, and barriers to evidence-based practice in social work. Dr. Ma has provided social work services thru clinical practice, program development, research, and education in the Greater-Houston area for over 15 years. Dr. Ma sets the standard for both clinical practice and leadership functions. As a clinician, she demonstrates her advanced clinical knowledge and skills while serving clients with integrity, respect, and excellence. As a leader, Dr. Ma inspires colleagues via motivational coaching, constructive feedback, and consultation to consistently meet productivity and performance standards, as well as to continuously grow as licensed professionals. Throughout her social work career, Dr. Ma has significantly contributed to process improvement projects, including performance tracking and monitoring, policy development, documentation coding research, and program-wide training initiative. Dr. Ma is passionate about teaching social work students how to systematically evaluate social work practice and programs using robust research designs and methods. |
Rebecca L Mauldin |
Rebecca’s research focuses on social relationships and wellbeing among older adults, with a particular emphasis on relationships in assisted living facilities. She is interested in interventions that improve social integration and empower older adults to provide social support to one another. Her dissertation research uses social network analysis to examine the co-evolution of friendships, acquaintances, social support, and negative interactions with physical and cognitive functioning and depression in an assisted living facility. Rebecca’s CSWE presentation, The Evolution of Student Relationships over Time in a Cohort-Based MSW Program, presents findings from a social network analysis she conducted among MSW students. Rebecca is interested in teaching macro social work, research methods, social theory, and aging studies. |
Anthony H Minter |
Across fifteen years Anthony has taught children in Texas public schools and adults at the Goodwill Central Texas Excel Center and in a women’s correctional facility. Through this work Anthony developed a passion for empowering communities through education. His primary research interests center on education equity, racial-ethnic discipline gaps, and the school-to-prison pipeline. Anthony’s secondary research interests include application of geographic information systems and so-called ‘big-data’ methodologies in social work research. At present he resides in Corpus Christi, where he works with the Antonio E Garcia Center on educational outreach, and chess club director. |